Ana Carolina da Silva (born 8 April 1991) is a Brazilian indoor volleyball player. She plays as a Middle blocker and has been a member of the Brazil women's national volleyball team since 2014.[1]
Career
editCarol won the silver medal and the Best Middle Blocker award at the 2013 Club World Championship playing with Unilever Vôlei.[2] Da Silva played with her national team,[3] winning the bronze at the 2014 World Championship[4] when her team defeated Italy 3–2 in the bronze medal match.[5]
During the 2015 FIVB Club World Championship, da Silva played with the Brazilian club Rexona Ades Rio and her team lost the bronze medal match to the Swiss Voléro Zürich,[6] Nonetheless, she won the tournament's Best Blocker award along with the Croatian Maja Poljak.[7] She averaged 1.07 stuff blocks per set, just behind Poljak who blocked 1.19.[8]
She won the 2017 South American Championship Best Middle Blocker award.[9] and later the 2017 FIVB World Grand Champions Cup Best Middle Blocker award.[10] In 2021 she competed for the first time in the Olympics in Tokyo 2020, winning silver medal with Brazil Volleyball Team. In the 2022 World Championship, won the silver medal after losing the final match against Serbia.
In August 11, 2024, Brazil defeated Turkey in the bronze medal match and Carol won her second olympic medal at the Paris 2024 Olympics.
Personal life
editOn 2 of March 2023, Carol married her long-time partner Anne Buijs, who is also a player for the Netherland's National Team. They've been together since they played for the sabe club in Rio de Janeiro, Rexona-Sesc. After that they played together for two international volleyball clubs, Nilufer in Turkey and Praia Clube located in Uberlândia, Brazil, where they got married. Playing together they won two times the Brazilian Superliga, in 2016/17 and 2022/23. They also played the same olympics for the first time, in Paris 2024, with their respective countries.
Awards
editIndividuals
editIn teams
edit- 2013 FIVB Club World Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2013 FIVB Club World Championship – "Best Blocker"
- 2015 FIVB Club World Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2014–15 Brazilian Superliga – "Best Blocker"
- 2015–16 Brazilian Superliga – "Best Blocker"
- 2015–16 Brazilian Superliga – "Best Server"
- 2018–19 Brazilian Superliga – "Best Blocker"
- 2018–19 Brazilian Superliga – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2020–21 Brazilian Superliga – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2021–22 Brazilian Superliga – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2022–23 Brazilian Superliga – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2017–18 Turkish Women's Volleyball League – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2017–18 Turkish Women's Volleyball League – "Best Blocker"
- 2015 South American Club Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2016 South American Club Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2016 South American Club Championship – "Most Valuable Player"
- 2020 South American Club Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2022 South American Club Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
In Brazil's national team
edit- 2014 Montreux Volley Masters – "Best Blocker"
- 2017 Montreux Volley Masters – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2017 Montreux Volley Masters – "Most Valuable Player"
- 2017 South American Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2021 South American Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2017 FIVB World Grand Champions Cup – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2017 FIVB World Grand Champions Cup – "Best Blocker"
- 2022 FIVB Nations League – "Best Middle Blocker"
- 2022 World Championship – "Best Middle Blocker"
Clubs
edit- 2011–12 Brazilian Superliga – Runner-Up, with Unilever Vôlei
- 2013–14 Brazilian Superliga – Champion, with Unilever Vôlei
- 2014–15 Brazilian Superliga – Champion, with Rexona-Ades
- 2015–16 Brazilian Superliga – Champion, with Rexona-Ades
- 2016–17 Brazilian Superliga – Champion, with Rexona-Sesc
- 2018–19 Brazilian Superliga – Runner-Up, with Dentil/Praia Clube
- 2020–21 Brazilian Superliga – Runner-Up, with Dentil/Praia Clube
- 2021–22 Brazilian Superliga – Runner-Up, with Dentil/Praia Clube
- 2022–23 Brazilian Superliga – Champion, with Dentil/Praia Clube
- 2023-24 Italian Superliga - Runner-Up, with Savino Del Bene Scandicci
- 2013 FIVB Club World Championship – Runner-Up, with Unilever Vôlei
- 2015 South American Club Championship – Champion, with Rexona-Ades
- 2016 South American Club Championship – Champion, with Rexona-Ades
- 2017 South American Club Championship – Champion, with Rexona-Sesc
- 2019 South American Club Championship – Runner-Up, with Dentil/Praia Clube
- 2020 South American Club Championship – Runner-Up, with Dentil/Praia Clube
- 2021 South American Club Championship – Champion, with Dentil/Praia Clube
- 2022 South American Club Championship – Runner-Up, with Dentil/Praia Clube
- 2023 South American Club Championship – Champion, with Dentil/Praia Clube
References
edit- ^ "Carol" (in Portuguese). Confederação Brasileira de Voleibol. Archived from the original on 2014-10-17. Retrieved 2014-10-12.
- ^ "Vakifbank Istanbul fly to first Women's Club World Champs title, China claim bronze". Zurich, Switzerland: FIVB. 2013-10-13. Retrieved 2013-10-13.
- ^ "Team Roster – Brazil". FIVB. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
- ^ "USA win first World Championship title, China and Brazil complete the podium". Milan, Italy: FIVB. 12 October 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
- ^ Carneiro, Leandro (12 October 2014). "Brasil passa sufoco e quase toma virada, mas conquista bronze ante Itália". UOL (in Portuguese). Milan, Italy. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
- ^ "Volero get it right on third try". Zurich, Switzerland: FIVB. 10 May 2015. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
- ^ "Eczacibasi from the top of Europe to the top of the world". Zurich, Switzerland: FIVB. 10 May 2015. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
- ^ "Repeat awards for Carol and Fabiola at Zurich 2015". Zurich, Switzerland: FIVB. 11 May 2015. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
- ^ "Brasil suma su 20º título y clasifica al Mundial de Japón en el sudamericano de Cali" (in Spanish). CSV. 19 August 2017. Retrieved 19 August 2017.
- ^ "China clinch second FIVB World Grand Champions Cup title". Nagoya, Japan: FIVB. 10 September 2017. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
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External links
edit- Media related to Ana Carolina da Silva at Wikimedia Commons